Johann Georg Ritter von Zimmermann

Johann Georg Ritter von Zimmermann / Johann Georg Zimmermann (8 December 1728, in Brugg, Aargau  7 October 1795, in Hanover) was a Swiss philosophical writer, naturalist, and physician.

Johann Georg Zimmermann

Life and works

Die Zerstörung von Lisabon (1756)

He studied at Göttingen, where he took the degree of a doctor of medicine, and established his reputation by the dissertation, De irritabilitate (1751). After traveling in the Netherlands and France, he practised as a physician in Brugg, and wrote Über die Einsamkeit ("Of solitude", 1756, 1784–85) and Vom Nationalstolz ("Of national pride", 1758). These books made a great impression in Germany, and were translated into almost every European language.[1]

In Zimmermann's character there was a strange combination of sentimentalism, melancholy and enthusiasm; and it was by the free and eccentric expression of these qualities that he excited the interest of his contemporaries. Another book by him, written at Brugg, Von der Erfahrung in der Arzneiwissenschaft ("Of experience in pharmacology", 1764), also attracted much attention. In 1768 he settled at Hanover as private physician of George III with the title of a Hofrat. Catherine II invited him to the court of St Petersburg, but this invitation he declined.[1]

He attended Frederick the Great during that monarch's last illness, and afterwards issued various books about him, of which the chief were Über Friederich den Grossen und meine Unterredung mit ihm kurz vor seinem Tode ("On Frederick the Great and my conversation with him shortly before his death", 1788) and Fragmente über Friedrich den Grossen ("Fragments on Frederick the Great", 1790). According to the Encyclopædia Britannica Eleventh Edition, "[t]hese writings display extraordinary personal vanity, and convey a wholly false impression of Frederick's character."[1]

He has a daughter named Katharina von Zimmermann, who died in her 20s because of Tuberculosis that also killed her mother and grandmother.

Works

  • Solitude; In Two Parts (1840)

Notes

Regarding personal names: Ritter is a title, translated approximately as Sir (denoting a Knight), not a first or middle name. There is no equivalent female form.

gollark: I see.
gollark: Isn't `drop 0` basically `id`, beeoid?
gollark: It's not that hard, it's just monoids in the category of endofunctors, but also burritos.
gollark: If you're firecubez, then explain why you are NOT cubes OR on fire.
gollark: Yes, you're "firecubez"; this is true and not false, entirely.

References

  1.  One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Zimmermann, Johann Georg, Ritter von". Encyclopædia Britannica. 28 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 981.
  2. IPNI.  J.G.Zimm.

Further reading

  • A. Rengger, Zimmermann's Briefe an einige seiner Freunde in der Schweiz (1830)
  • E. Bodemann, Johann Georg Zimmermann, sein Leben und bisher ungedruckte Briefe an ihn (Hanover, 1878)
  • R. Ischer, Johann Georg Zimmermanns Leben und Werke (Bern, 1893)
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